DMR Network

History
Almost thirty years ago amateur radio operators in Auckland and Wellington worked together to install a Wellington to Auckland link on the UHF band. Later known as the National System, the network now covers New Zealand from the Bay of Islands down to Balclutha with 28 connected repeater stations operating independent of telco infrastructure.

While still an invaluable AREC resource, the National System is an analog network using 20th century technology. Today the Internet has driven an increased demand for networked applications, increased availability of communications, and created expectations for services such as digital messaging, GPS, location, and applications such as job ticketing where tasks can be presented directly on radio screens.

Overview
AREC has risen to the challenge presented by our SLA partners to bring the organization’s communications resources into the 21st century with the development of an all-digital radio network. A trial system was established in Wellington for testing before gradually rolling out to other centres as funds permit. The ZL TRBO system is a DMR MARC affiliated network.

Open a new page to view the AREC DMR Network 70/33cm map for New Zealand

Technology
Choosing the right technology has not been an easy task. On one hand we were well aware of the P25 standard development in the whole of government space, on the other hand amateurs have their own D-STAR™ standard. A registered trademark of Icom Incorporated, D-STAR equipment provided by that company along with homemade adapters are popular and used by experimenters around the world.

For an effective network it is necessary to consider both the ease of linking as well as the availability of base station and subscriber radio equipment. In addition it would be difficult to justify to our funding agency the purchase of equipment available only from a single vendor. For these reasons and after much discussion the AREC Management team decided to build a network based on the ETSI DMR digital mobile radio standard. DMR equipment is available from Harris, Hytera, Kenwood, Kirisun, Motorola, Puxing, Selex, Sepura, Simoco, Tait, Yaesu Vertex, and various other vendors. Icom is a member of the DMR Association but does not market equipment as yet.

The network operates at UHF which preserves the option of using the P25 system at VHF should the need arise in the future. It should be noted that amateurs are making limited use of P25 at VHF but this activity is not directly related to AREC.

Wide area linking of the present DMR network is occurring using either direct microwave at 5.8 GHz or telco provided Internet (cable, fibre, and temporary connections via cellular). It is hoped to gradually extend the direct linking to avoid reliance on telco services to improve resilience.

Open a new page to view the current AREC DMR Network activity for New Zealand

Open a new page to read more about DMR and AREC in New Zealand

Talkgroup Information
There are a number of talkgroups carried on the ZL-TRBO DMR network. These are:

ZL (TG530/TS2) is a nationwide talkgroup carried on all ZL TRBO DMR repeaters in timeslot 2. This is the primary New Zealand wide talkgroup.
ZK (TG8/TS1) is a second nationwide talkgroup carried on all ZL TRBO DMR repeaters. It differs from ZL in that it is carried in timeslot 1, thus ZL and ZK can be in use simultaneously. It is intended primarily for wide area AREC use but is available for general use if TS1 is not busy with international traffic. In an emergency overseas talkgroups are removed from timeslot 1 to allow unimpeded use of the ZK talkgroup.
LCL (TG9/TS2) is carried only on a master repeater and its immediate peers. Currently there are four masters: Northern, Central, Midland, and the 33cm Master. Depending on your home repeater LCL will cover the Upper North Island, lower North Island, or South Island.
WW (TG1/TS1) is the original World Wide talkgroup, primary language is English but you will hear contacts in other languages. It is should now only be used as a calling channel. It is PTT activated, so traffic is not carried on TS1 unless it is being actively used.
WWE (TG13/TS1) is the World Wide English language talkgroup. This is the preferred talkgroup for international contacts. It is PTT activated.
UAE1 (TG113/TS1) and UAE2 (TG123/TS1) are the so called ‘user access’ talkgroups. These are intended as overflow groups for WWE. They differ in that use of WWE keys up over a thousand repeaters worldwide and ties up the timeslot that it is carried in for the duration of the contact on all those repeaters. On the other hand UAE1 and UAE2 only key up the local repeaters at each end of the contact and free up the timeslot on the rest of the network. The idea is that you would make contact on WWE then change to UAE1 or UAE2 if you are going to have a long QSO. UAE1 and UAE2 are intended for English language contacts. PTT activated.
UAA1 (TG119/TS1) and UAA2 (TG129/TS1) are the equivalent user access groups for WW, QSOs in any language can occur in these groups. Note some ZL codeplugs don’t include UAA1/UAA2. PTT activated.

MARC and DMRplus
DMRplus groups are being carried to support new technology in a wider range of connected devices for experimenters. DMR-MARC has formed a partnership with the DMRplus network to support this innovation.

The DMRplus reflector 4851 South Pacific on TG153 TS1 open to all. PTT activated.
The DMRplus reflector 4850 New Zealand connects to ZL TG530 TS2.
ZL amateurs only but can be accessed by ZL amateurs from anywhere in the world via hotspot or available DMRplus / DMR MARC networks.

DMRplus / IPSC
The IPSC2 bridge technology supports Hytera repeaters, homebrew MMDVM systems, and hotspot access via the DV4mini, openSPOT, and mmdvm systems. The DMRplus master and IPSC2 programs that power the DMRplus network has been developed by Thorsten DG1HT, Kurt OE1KBC, and Hans-Jürgen DL5DI. Reflectors are connected to the ZL TRBO network via an IPSC2 instance on Centos Linux installed right alongside the existing cBridge. The job of the DMRplus IPSC2 server is to bridge DMRplus reflectors to the cBridge and core AREC ZL TRBO network. In October 2018 the IPSC2 hardware was upgraded to a new server to improve reliability.

Open a new page to view the current DMRplus New Zealand IPSC2 server activity

DMR Equipment
One of the reasons why DMR has now become the most popular amateur digital voice system is that there is a radio price point for every budget. From second hand auction site deals through to brand new top tier commercial radios, there is no shortage of choice. Some top of the line radios now offer up to four RF bands with both P25 and DMR digital modes as well as legacy analog operation in the one radio but with a price to match. Radios made in China are particularly popular with amateurs and are priced from sub US$100 to US$200. A recent inexpensive amateur 900MHz handheld enables sub $100 access to 33cm DMR.

Just be careful that the radio you want to purchase actually implements the ETSI DMR Tier II standard. One or two low end radios promoted as DMR turned out to be DMR Tier I only and will not work on normal amateur DMR systems. If in doubt, Google.

Codeplugs are available for radios widely used in New Zealand on the DMR Download page of this site.